Austin
Cronicle
TEXAS:
At Home With Capital Punishment---Anti-death-penalty activists march down
Congress Avenue on Saturday.
Following
a march through downtown to the Governor's Mansion and the Capitol, a couple of
hundred death penalty abolitionists gathered Saturday afternoon at what they
called the third point on "the axis of evil" -- the Court of Criminal
Appeals, where many wrongly convicted Texas defendants have had their cases run
aground before the heavily politicized and prosecution-biased justices. While
acknowledging this was a bad legislative year for Texas advocates of justice,
David Atwood of the Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty insisted he
remains undaunted, even optimistic. "We will win this battle," Atwood
told the crowd, and recited the reasons he remains hopeful. "Over the last
10 to 15 years," he said, "we have gone from a handful of people to a
movement of hundreds of people. When we began, all the state's major newspapers
supported the death penalty; now several major state newspapers have either
opposed the death penalty altogether, or at least called for a moratorium. 5 or
10 years ago, not a single state legislator was willing to publicly oppose the
death penalty. Now several have been willing to file bills calling for a
moratorium. ..." That said, although a number of bills indeed proposed
capital punishment reform, there was no legislative progress against the death
penalty this year.
Sandra
Reed spoke of her son, Rodney, convicted in 1998 in the murder of a Giddings
woman, Stacey Stites, on the basis of DNA evidence that Reed's family insists
simply confirms that Rodney and Stacey were lovers. Reed pointed out that the
rest of the physical evidence in the case points to other suspects, and that
specifically Stites' fianc�, a Giddings police officer, failed two polygraph
examinations on the question of his involvement in the murder. That evidence, as
well as other exonerating evidence, was not admitted at trial. (For more on this,
see "Who Killed Stacey Stites?" by Jordan Smith, May 24, 2002.) Reed
said that her family's experience in the court system has led her to believe
that it is rife with "corruption, deceit, lies, and greed."
Anita
Babineaux described the case of Nanon Williams, arrested for a murder in 1992,
when he was 17 years old. Williams' case has been caught up in the controversy
now surrounding the Houston Police Department crime lab -- forensic evidence
involving hundreds of crimes has been called into doubt by poor handling, sloppy
records, and potentially criminal false or misleading testimony by forensic
witnesses. The technician who initially provided the evidence supposedly
connecting Williams' gun to the murder later retracted his own testimony, and
the defense is trying, thus far in vain, to persuade the courts to overturn the
conviction. "This was not a capital murder case from the beginning,"
said Babineaux, "and the so-called criminal justice system is an integral
part of a system of racial and class oppression."
Jeannette
Popp, who became an abolitionist activist in the aftermath of the murder of her
daughter Nancy DePriest, took the occasion to declare her candidacy for state
representative from Fort Worth, the District 99 seat currently held by
Republican Charlie Geren. "I've got no money and no campaign manager,"
said Popp, "but I've got plenty of determination." She said it is time
for ordinary Texans to try to take control of their own government. "We've
got to save ourselves and our families," said Popp, "the human race,
the state of Texas. I'm a proud Texan, and it hurts me to know that our state is
known all over the world as the home of the death penalty."
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